Jagow (noble family)
Von Jagow the name is an old and important Altmark noble family .
history
The Jagow family, possibly a branch of the Uchtenhagen , first appeared in a document in 1268 with Arnoldus de Jagow , with whom the family line began . The family was named after their headquarters Jagow , a current district of Uckerland in the Uckermark , where it was mentioned in 1250. It was located in the Altmark , in Pomerania , in Magdeburg and Lüneburg and in other parts of Germany. The Jagow were Erbjägermeister (also Erb-Jägermeister ) of the Kurmark Brandenburg since September 3, 1798, renewed on October 15, 1840. Hereditary hunters were Friedrich Wilhelm Thomas Achatz von Jagow (1779–1854), his son Karl von Jagow (1818–1888) and again his son Günther von Jagow (1847–1928) ).
One of the possessions was the Scharpenhufe estate in Aland (Altmark) , which was bought back by the family after German reunification, who ran a 600 hectare farm there. Calberwisch belonged to the family from 1524 until the expropriation in 1945, furthermore from 1606 to 1919 Krüden , from 1780 until the expropriation in 1945 Rühstädt . In addition, Gut Dallmin near Karstädt and Gut Quitzöbel (today Legde / Quitzöbel ).
The von Jagow belonged in the 14th and 15th centuries, together with the Alvensleben , Bartensleben , Bismarck , von dem Knesebeck , Platen , Schenck (von Flechtingen and Dönstedt ) as well as von der Schulenburg to the eight castle-seated families of the Altmark, who directly belonged to the governor and were given the title noble by the emperor and the margrave as belonging to the army .
coat of arms
The shield shows a six-spoke red wheel in silver. A natural badger with two silver lily arrows on its neck strides on the helmet with its red and silver covers. According to the coat of arms , they are of a tribe with the von Stülpnagel as well as the similarity of the coat of arms and common region of origin probably also with the uckermark von Gloeden , the von Uchtenhagen , the von Wedell and the von Wreech .
At Vitzenburg Castle there are alliance coats of arms of those von der Schulenburg- Heßler and those von Jagow.
Known family members
- Matthias von Jagow (1480–1544), reformer and bishop of Brandenburg
- Ludwig Friedrich von Jagow (1770-1825), Prussian major general, head stable master (since 1810)
- Wilhelm von Jagow (1770–1838), Prussian district administrator for the Osterburg district
- Friedrich Wilhelm von Jagow (1771–1857), Prussian infantry general, honorary citizen of Erfurt (since 1825) and Magdeburg (since 1835)
- Friedrich von Jagow (1802-1858), Prussian district administrator in the Osterburg district
- Adolf von Jagow (1811–1881), royal Prussian chamberlain
- Gustav von Jagow (1813–1879), Prussian civil servant and conservative politician
- Karl von Jagow (1818–1888), landowner and conservative politician
- Julius von Jagow (1825–1897), district administrator and member of the constituent Reichstag of the North German Confederation
- Bernhard von Jagow (1840–1916), landowner and Prussian politician
- Günther von Jagow (1847–1928), landowner and Prussian politician, MdR
- Hermann von Jagow (-Scharpenhufe) (1848–1923), landowner and Prussian politician, MdR
- Eugen von Jagow (1849–1905), German writer
- Ernst von Jagow (1853–1930), Upper Prussian President, Canon of Brandenburg
- Gottlieb von Jagow (1863–1935), German diplomat and politician
- Traugott von Jagow (1865–1941), police chief of Berlin
- Walther von Jagow (1867–1928), German cavalry general
- Hans-Georg von Jagow (1880–1945), German lieutenant general
- Dietrich von Jagow (1892–1945), German envoy, SA- Obergruppenführer and Reichstag member of the NSDAP
- Clemens von Jagow (1903–1993), President of the Lübeck Regional Court from 1956 to 1968
Scharpenhufe Castle
Rühstädt Castle around 1860
Krüden Castle around 1860
literature
- Genealogical manual of the nobility , Adelslexikon . Volume VI, Volume 91 of the complete series, CA Starke Verlag, Limburg / Lahn 1987, pp. 17-18; Volume XVII: Supplements , Volume 144 of the complete series, 2008, p. 347.
- Ernst Heinrich Kneschke : New general German nobility Lexicon , Volume 4, Leipzig 1863, pp. 543-544 ( books.google.de ).
- Johann Georg Theodor Grasse : Book of legends of the Prussian state. Volume 1, 1868, p. 209 ( books.google.de ).
- Uchtenhagen, one gender. In: Johann Heinrich Zedler : Large complete universal lexicon of all sciences and arts . Volume 46, Leipzig 1745, column 848 f.
- Gothaisches genealogical pocket book of noble houses . First year, Justus Perthes, Gotha 1901, p. 444 ff. ( Digital.ub.uni-duesseldorf.de ).
- Jagow . In: Marcelli Janecki , Deutsche Adelsgenossenschaft (Hrsg.): Yearbook of the German nobility . First volume. WT Bruer's Verlag, Berlin 1896, p. 838-855 ( dlib.rsl.ru ).
- Torsten Foelsch (arr.): Chronicle of the von Jagow family. Gross Gottschow 1999
Web links
- Jagow's in the Wildenfels Castle Archives
- The one from Uchtenhagen on Mittelgazette.de
Individual evidence
- ↑ Christian Gahlbeck : On the origin and composition of the Neumark nobility up to the middle of the 14th century. In: Klaus Neitmann (Hrsg.) Landlord, nobility and cities in the medieval and early modern Neumark. , Berlin 2015, 115–181.
- ^ Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels, Adelslexikon. Volume VI, page 17, CA Starke-Verlag, Limburg 1987.
- ↑ Christoph Schulte: Nietzsches Entartung 1892 - Max Nordau as an early Nietzsche critic. In: Werner Stegmaier u. a. (Ed.): Jewish Nietzscheanism. Berlin / New York 1997, p. 151 f.
- ↑ With contributions by Sophie von Jagow, Anna von Jagow, Gottlieb von Jagow, Anna Schnurre, geb. von Jagow and Georg von Jagow as well as two essays by Carl and Günther von Jagow, edited for the von Jagow family association, edition 50, self-published, based on the handwritten original kept in Rühstädt from 1880 onwards.